My pod x3 all the sudden wont let me on gearbox or line 6 monkey tonight.. It keeps saying no device detected, but when i turn on my pod i can hear it connect through my computer speakers...Ive tried different usb connections on my computer and it keeps saying the samething

I used to have that all the time. I have both a Line6 Guitarport and a X3 Live connected and my gearbox and the monkey kept finding only the Guitarport, couldn't see the X3 anywhere.

My X3 drivers weren't installed properly, if I remember well if was the "new hardware detected" that never went through in the correct sequence and it was possible to finish the installation without passing the actual drivers installation (yeah, wierd). It was all very confusing.

But since your's used to work and all of a sudden doesn't possibly makes your problem a different one. But still, check the drivers through the control panels System->Hardware devices->Sound

When you turn the pod, use the navigation button to check the system page. It will show the firmware versions.,

If it shows USB firmware 0.00, then it is probably a hardware problem and you will have to return it for repair like I did.... I love the POD but I got pissed off because it took a month for they to repair (they had to sent it to sweden).

Just shut everything down and unplug everthing (PC and POD). Let it set for a minute and then boot your PC.

After that then plug in your POD. See if that works.

Good luck

If that doesn't work then shut down again, unplug the POD, boot your PC, reinstall the software for your POD and when it ask you to plug it in do it (you may have to uninstall the POD software first for this to work). Maybe that will fix it.

This post has been edited by UncleSkillet: Oct 6 2008, 02:57 AM

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"Think of a guitar solo as a paragraph. You need a clear beginning, a middle, and an end. Look at musical phrases like sentences, and make sure you break them up using punctuation—or space. You pause naturally when conversing, right? If you don't, you'll bore the listener. The same thing will happen with your audience if your solo is one dimensional. You'll wear them out and lose their attention." —Tom Principato

"Think of a guitar solo as a paragraph. You need a clear beginning, a middle, and an end. Look at musical phrases like sentences, and make sure you break them up using punctuation—or space. You pause naturally when conversing, right? If you don't, you'll bore the listener. The same thing will happen with your audience if your solo is one dimensional. You'll wear them out and lose their attention." —Tom Principato

"Think of a guitar solo as a paragraph. You need a clear beginning, a middle, and an end. Look at musical phrases like sentences, and make sure you break them up using punctuation—or space. You pause naturally when conversing, right? If you don't, you'll bore the listener. The same thing will happen with your audience if your solo is one dimensional. You'll wear them out and lose their attention." —Tom Principato